Monthly Archives

Monthly Archives for October 2004.

Kayak.com

Samir passes along a new travel metasearch site, Kayak.com which is similar in many ways to SideStep and Mobissimo with a clean, user-friendly interface. You enter travel search criteria, it scours multiple travel providers, and collates the results. It isn’t a silver bullet tool but it’s definitely one to add to the arsenal (and to add to my How to Get the Best Airfare Deals FAQ when I get around to updating it). Like other similar sites, Kayak.com makes money on referral commissions for your purchases. Doesn’t bother me a whit, it’s a useful tool so well they should make something. Their partner list isn’t as extensive as Mobissimo’s, they don’t seem to include consolidators like OneTravel for instance in their searches, but they include more search parameters like including multiple airports so Kayak.com’s added…

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Another Reason Why TED is Inferior, Even When It Tries to Improve

United’s TED flights will be experimenting by offering DVD player and movie rentals. Passengers will rent the devices for $12 at the gate and return them at their destination. JetBlue offers free live satellite TV — meaning a whole lot more channels and choices compared to a single movie. Denver-based Frontier, a primary competitor of United, offers TV for $5. $12 makes United uncompetitive, especially when most business travelers won’t be able to seek reimbursement for the rental from their company.

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Startup Launched to Predict Airfare Prices

Hamlet, which asks: “To Buy Or Not To Buy” attempts to uncover algorithms that predict whether airline prices will go up or down and help consumers decide the right time to purchase their tickets. The early-stage company, which recently raised $1.5 million from Madrona Venture Group and WRF Capital, is trying to crack into the multibillion-dollar travel market with a technology that predicts the ever-fluctuating prices of airline tickets. The value of the service should be clear for any airline traveler who has paid $400 for a round-trip ticket, only to discover that the price dropped $100 the following day. If they had only waited, they could have saved some serious money on that trip to Honolulu or Houston. That’s where Hamlet comes in, informing travelers of the best time to buy. I don’t worry…

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Venetian Special in Vegas

The Venetian is running a special $129 room rate which includes a coupon book with some cool stuff like $100 off at Movado, one $25 slot credit or $25 match play per stay, and a 2-for-1 museum admission. If you can’t pick up the Venetian in the $75 range on Priceline, and don’t want to stay at the Orleans for $20, this may be your best bet in Vegas if there’s availability on the dates of your stay.

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Perverse results from rigid travel expense rules

Via Travel Notes, the New York Times carries a story on companies’ increasing use of computer software to flag expense reports that violate corporate travel policies. Computers, of course, can only compare expenses to policy, rather than making a normative judgment about what expenses make sense. In fact, the piece suggests that when companies adopt this kind of software, they tend to tighten up their travel policies to remove existing areas for judgment from employees’ hands. While that can be a cost-saving measure, it can also lead to some perverse results which dampen employee morale. On a business trip to Bismarck, N.D., David Godfrey flew into town two days early to qualify for a cheaper airline ticket. His total savings were $300. He stayed at a friend’s house instead of checking into a hotel, knocking…

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